Balcer’s brother, Christopher, told the Kennebec Journal that there was no abuse in the Winthrop home the family shared, saying their parents would have been supportive of Andrea’s transition, despite Balcer’s claims to the contrary.

Dr. Debra Baeder, Maine’s chief forensic psychiatrist, testified last year that Balcer was afraid her parents would not accept her as she transitioned.

Baeder held several sessions with the teen after the murders.

In one session, she said Balcer told her: ‘Maybe I should be someone else. Maybe, I should be a woman.’

‘I couldn’t be as flamboyant as I wanted. I couldn’t dress the way I wanted,’ she testified Balcer told her.

Andrea Balcer: ‘I am conflicted between the person that I was raised to be and the person who I want to be.’

Referencing her gender identity, Balcer revealed last week: ‘I spent however many years being raised as a boy, as a man. It was drilled into me what men do, what they’re supposed to be. I was never raised the way I wanted to be. So I am conflicted between the person that I was raised to be and the person who I want to be.’

A recording of Balcer’s 12 minute call to 911 following her parents’ slayings revealed the then 17 year old teen confessing to stabbing his mother in the back while she was hugging her, before stabbing her father upon being waking up from the screams.

During the recordings, Balcer admits to lashing out after, ‘snapping’.

Upon police arriving at the family home, they found a military-style knife stuck in the floor near Balcer’s father’s body.

‘I took my Ka-Bar (knife) and drove it straight into my mother’s back,’ Balcer told the dispatcher after murdering her parents October 31, 2016.

‘My father came up because he heard her screams and I stabbed the f**k out of him.’

She said she stabbed the dog because it would not stop barking.

Antonio Balcer and Alice Balcer

Andrea Balcer seeks plea deal in return for less than 55 years jail during sentencing:

Alice Balcer was stabbed nine times and Antonio Balcer was stabbed a dozen times, according to the autopsy report.

Prosecutors filed a petition to have Balcer tried as an adult which would have meant an automatic life sentence under Maine law. The stabbings occurred a month before Balcer’s 18th birthday.

During their court appearance on Wednesday, Balcer pled guilty to two counts of intentional or knowing murder and one count of aggravated cruelty to animals. The plea agreement followed Maine attorney general’s office calling for the prosecution to recommend 55 years in prison.

McKee is now seeking to ask for less time in prison.

Balcer, who has been held without bail since the 2016 murder, will be sentenced in November.